Source: USA Today Page: 6A Contact: Pubdate: 7 Nov 1997 PENTAGON ORDERED TO SPEND MORE IN WAR ON DRUGS By Robert Burns, The Associated Press WASHINGTONIn an unprecedented move, President Clinton's drug policy director ordered the Defense Department to add $141 million in the 1999 budget to its planned spending on drugcontrol programs. Barry McCaffrey said his office could not certify that the Pentagon's proposed $809 million drugfighting budget for fiscal 1999 was enough to implement the president's policy. "To correct the deficiencies," he said in a letter to Defense Secretary William Cohen, the Pentagon must include $141 million more in drug control to strengthen operations in Mexico, the Andes, the Caribbean and along the southern border. McCaffrey listed specific steps and spending amounts in each area. Col. Richard Bridges, a Pentagon spokesman, said Cohen's office was reviewing the letter and did not dispute that McCaffrey has the legal authority to require more spending. "We'll respond in a timely manner," Bridges said. Although the Defense Department has not yet submitted its request for fiscal 1999 spending to the Offfice of Management and Budget, McCaffrey's offfice said the Pentagon was planning to ask for $809 million for counterdrug operations. That is virtually identical to what it is spending in the current fiscal 1998 budget. According to statistics provided by McCaffrey's office, the Pentagon's counterdrug budget is only 1.3% higher than in fiscal 1990, while total federal spending in this area has increased 63.7%.